I am a Dumbass!

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loon

Minister of Fire
Apr 9, 2010
1,763
ont canada
Had to go into town earlier to get gas for the 4 wheeler and before that i was getting the stove ready for the days burn..Guess what? I friggen left the damper wide open <>

The stove top was only 600f and the pipe was 400f but man it sure does give a guy a wake up call..

Double check when leaving the house gang!

Mrs loon and friends went to Cuba the other day, so i didnt have any back-up.

loon
 
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I call over 600 just getting warmed up.
 
Hell, I don't even need to leave the house.

I have, on two occasions, loaded the 30 and then got distracted and have come back to a stove north of 800 degrees. Once I was even IN THE SAME ROOM. I got a business call and I am at my desk with my back to the stove. 40 minutes into the call and I'm beginning to wonder why I am sweating...

I'm not too bright and I have three stoves to remind me of this on, nearly, a daily basis six months out of the year.
 
With the summit I got woke up to 800 + to the sound of smoke alarms, never had the pipe that hot up higher to bake the paint, freaks one out I tell ya, still a big fan of steel stoves for this reason, they are the toughest in my book.
Half hour cat naps can do wonders :oops:
 
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Had to go into town earlier to get gas for the 4 wheeler and before that i was getting the stove ready for the days burn..Guess what? I friggen left the damper wide open <>

The stove top was only 600f and the pipe was 400f but man it sure does give a guy a wake up call..

Double check when leaving the house gang!

Mrs loon and friends went to Cuba the other day, so i didnt have any back-up.

loon
Loon, it happens so easily. I am going to carry a timer so it beeps after 10 mins so I don't forget. Glad it was not too bad and it depends on what temp scares you, 600 would not bother me but it is all what you are used too. I would hate to be twenty miles away and remember that I had not shut the stove down and no one was home, now that would get me sweating!!!!!
 
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With the summit I got woke up to 800 + to the sound of smoke alarms, never had the pipe that hot up higher to bake the paint, freaks one out I tell ya, still a big fan of steel stoves for this reason, they are the toughest in my book.
Half hour cat naps can do wonders :oops:
Will the paint on a stovepipe bake,and what does it smell like?Thanks,I though the paint was good for like 1200*.
 
Still thinking about what coulda happend...

Got a few fire extinguishers here but 'nobody' was home except the 3 amigo's <>


Picture2620.jpg


Gonna have to teach Emma how to work that one in behind her ear ;)
 
Loon,
Glad it wasn't worse.
Is that 400 external temp on flue? Imagine it must be with the stove top 600. Hate to think where mine would be if I did that. Worst I've done is walk the dog to the gate and realize when I got there that the damper was open. :rolleyes: Artan enjoyed the run back.

Have often wondered when you post "going to town", where "town" is. Elgin? Westport? Gananoque? Kingston? "Going to town" for me is most often Smiths Falls (Because there isn't anything in POrtland), and it would be pretty much disaster if I found myself is Smiths Falls, and realized I had an open damper at the home. Afraid a neighbor would be getting a rather urgent call.
 
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Had some big numbers back on Rays T5 thread rideau that i sure didnt like !!! 600f is fine here.

I go to Kingston when i go to town as its only about 20 minutes away. There is a gas bar closer but i had to grab a couple other things in the big city >>
 
I am a Dumbass!

Um, ok.

But, you're not alone. I had a similar brain fart yesterday while kneading bread. After I loaded the stove. Then walked away.
DOH! Single wall was just a hair over 450 and smelling.....funny. Not hah hah funny, but weird funny.
You know, like melting steel funny.
 
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Will the paint on a stovepipe bake,and what does it smell like?Thanks,I though the paint was good for like 1200*.
Back in the day when I knew everything, lol I used some discount store motor paint to make the thick ugly pc of pipe look pretty that was used for a nipple sticking out of the wall.
Thats all been re done now.
 
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This thread is exactly why I built my digital stove alarm. Ive come out into the living room several times to see the stove way over temperature from people forgetting to check on it after loading.. Its a scary thing for sure.

While the current one wouldnt help if I was on the road, "Stove thermometer Mk.2 " might. Its possible to have an alarm condition send an email or text to your cellphone. It's not that hard to do with the proper hardware.
 
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and at my age i keep saying the older i get the more i forget ;em
 
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Consider yourself lucky it only hit 600 lol..... Guess you learned a lesson that and it should be a reminder for everyone else also! Glad it turned out to be no big deal and that you are getting along with your stove so well!
 
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I've had it happen a couple times on the fireview- with the bypass open the flames can shoot right up the pipe and overheat the chimney in a big hurry.
Scared me enough to buy the parts to put together monitoring system - a temp probe, relay output temp controller and a 110v mini air compressor. Plan was to monitor flue temps and if it hit a set point to turn on the air compressor- The air compressor would be connected to a small air cylinder that would close down the draft. Have not actually done it because I've learned to be pay close attention to the stoves when in bypass / air wide open mode. Probably should still complete it. I am also the only one who operates the stoves, if others were doing it I would definately have the monitoring system installed.
 
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I've had the double slip pipe up to 300 but never had the stovetop over 650 or so That Fireview can get that pipe hot fast is right..
 
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Glad things were OK, Loon. Glad the crew is OK, too.

Loaded the PE the other night, got everything ready for sleeping time, and forgot to crank the air down on the PE.......wondered why when I woke up @ 5:30 AM and didn't hear the fan cycling........... duh !!

Lucky me, everything fine.

It happens.
 
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Welcome to the club, Im a lifetime member, Ive done the same and was never more than 15 feet from the stove, must be my adhd.
 
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All these comments show just how far we've got from common sense in using wood stoves! DO NOT overload the stove, EVER! Do NOT load for an all-day or all-night burn (unless you live in a cave.) NEVER put pitchy wood in a stove (except tiny pieces of fatwood to start the fire.) NEVER put more than one "presto" or "firelog." type fuel in the stove at a time. Any of these episodes just may have been creosote fires. Did anyone look at the flue after? In my experience, creosote only forms from burning wet wood, pitchy wood, or from overloading a stove, and reducing the combustion air. All these episodes resulted from failures of common sense.
 
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